| Literature DB >> 32597659 |
Yeon Ui Lee1, Junxiang Zhao1, Gary C H Mo2,3, Shilong Li1, Guangru Li1, Qian Ma1, Qingqing Yang4, Ratnesh Lal4,5, Jin Zhang2, Zhaowei Liu1,4.
Abstract
The past two decades have witnessed a dramatic progress in the development of novel super-resolution fluorescence microscopy technologies. Here, we report a new fluorescence imaging method, called metamaterial-assisted photobleaching microscopy (MAPM), which possesses a nanometer-scale axial resolution and is suitable for broadband operation across the entire visible spectrum. The photobleaching kinetics of fluorophores can be greatly modified via a separation-dependent energy transfer process to a nearby metamaterial. The corresponding photobleaching rate is thus linked to the distance between the fluorophores and the metamaterial layer, leading to a reconstructed image with exceptionally high axial resolution. We apply the MAPM technology to image the HeLa cell membranes tagged with fluorescent proteins and demonstrate an axial resolution of ∼2.4 nm with multiple colors. MAPM utilizes a metamaterial-coated substrate to achieve super-resolution without altering anything else in a conventional microscope, representing a simple solution for fluorescence imaging at nanometer axial resolution.Entities:
Keywords: Metamaterial; Nanophotonics; Photobleaching microscopy; Plasmonics; Purcell effect; Super-resolution imaging
Year: 2020 PMID: 32597659 DOI: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.0c02056
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nano Lett ISSN: 1530-6984 Impact factor: 11.189